How did Capablanca ever lose a game?
Capablanca vs K Treybal, 1929  (D11) Queen's Gambit Declined Slav, 58 moves, 1-0
Piece activation at it's finest. Modern Chess is based on this
Morphy vs Duke Karl / Count Isouard, 1858  (C41) Philidor Defense, 17 moves, 1-0
Clear logical hypermodern game by Fischer,
D Byrne vs Fischer, 1956  (D92) Grunfeld, 5.Bf4, 41 moves, 0-1
Karpov shows how to play a N vs B endgame
Karpov vs Kasparov, 1984  (D34) Queen's Gambit Declined, Tarrasch, 70 moves, 1-0
Nice closed game
Kasparov vs X3D Fritz, 2003  (D45) Queen's Gambit Declined Semi-Slav, 45 moves, 1-0
Karpov gets tactical
Karpov vs Gulko, 1996  (D27) Queen's Gambit Accepted, Classical, 42 moves, 1-0
Back-row mate theme,
O Bernstein vs Capablanca, 1914  (D63) Queen's Gambit Declined, Orthodox Defense, 29 moves, 0-1
Nice positional pawn sac, followed up by a pseudo rook sac
Seirawan vs Mecking, 1992  (D85) Grunfeld, 37 moves, 1-0
Hydra plays more strategically sound than Pono's anti-comp plan
Ponomariov vs Hydra, 2004  (E15) Queen's Indian, 33 moves, 0-1
attack on the wing, counterattack in center. Brilliant B+N Sac
Botvinnik vs Capablanca, 1938  (E40) Nimzo-Indian, 4.e3, 41 moves, 1-0
Hard to believe not every move is a !!
Fischer vs Petrosian, 1971  (B42) Sicilian, Kan, 34 moves, 1-0
Computer plays a positional masterpiece.
Hydra vs Adams, 2005  (C87) Ruy Lopez, 41 moves, 1-0
The Flying V
Petrosian vs Petrovsky, 1946  (E11) Bogo-Indian Defense, 28 moves, 1-0
Petrosian vs Y Kotkov, 1946  (E10) Queen's Pawn Game, 20 moves, 1-0
|